Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Taiwan: Say "No!" to Gay Marriage

President-Elect Donald Trump got a phone call. It
was the President of Taiwan, Tsai Ing-Wen.

She signaled her support and offered congratulations
to our leader.

Reminder, embittered liberals: she called him, so
back off and take a deep breath. Looking
for any last-minute push for relevance, the media insisted in another fitful
field day following that call. “How could Trump take a phone call from the
opposition nationalists?” For some left-wing reason (actually, no reason at
all), the President-Elect shouldn’t be talking to Taiwanese President without
permission from Communist China.

Not anymore, folks. That’s not how Trump rolls.

Traditions and arrogant assumptions are getting rejected
all over the world.

The “little people” have stood up to the British
elites, the American media (and the Democratic Party). Even the Italians
rejected centralized governance and European Union austerity.

It’s a new morning in the world.

So, traditions are falling to the wayside …

Another “tradition” should be put away, as well: the
global(ist) obsession with “gay marriage.”

And Taiwan, incidentally enough, is the next battle
ground.

Taiwan’s new President, a member of the island
nation’s loyal opposition, has pledged a commitment to helping the poor, the
disadvantaged. Like a number of left-leaning politicos, she is also reaching
out to the “LGBT” movement.

Oh brother.

I have great hopes for the Asian countries, just as
I have witnessed the Latin American nations resist the homosexual agenda and
the gender-bending ideologies of anti-Western snobs.

To their credit, the Taiwanese people elected a
popular leader to their Presidency, who resists a strong alliance with Beijing.
She also bested another attempt by President Barack Obama to influence a
foreign election for his limited ambitions. Besides, President Tsai’s ascension
is the latest step in a trend away from the autocratic Kuomintang, which has
held decades-long one-party rule in Taiwan, since the 1940s, when the
Nationalists fled China following World War II.

Still, she has a distinctly “progressive” platform,
to be sure.

Flag of Taiwan

I learned a great deal about her party (The
Democratic Progressive Party) and their history at a local celebration held in
Monterey Park, California. The event took place on Veterans Day, 2016—three
days after Donald Trump’s historic and unprecedented win against Hillary
Clinton, defeating the media, political elites of both parties, plus the
corporatist, globalist interests from Washington to Brussels.

The Democratic Progressive Party of Taiwan had sent
delegates to the United States. They were learning about the electoral and
political systems of the United States. Two Congressman attended—Judy Chu of
Pasadena, and Ed Royce of Brea. Local officials informed me that Republican
efforts have committed to working with the DPP to bring them more to the
political center. The invitation from a DPP ambassador was well-appreciated
(they wanted to learn about local as well as national politics). I could not turn down the opportunity.

I documented the
psychological and physical risks associated with homosexual conduct (freely
acknowledged by homosexuals themselves), all detailed in the liberal-leaning LA Weekly. (Click
here and here
for more information).

I then related the battle
which Californians across the state, from the Christians colleges to the local
churches, to stop SB 1146, a bill which in its original form would have shut
down Christian colleges and destroyed religious liberty.

Pro-life, pro-family
forces have halted this destructive movement in other countries. Let us hope
and pray that the free people of Taiwan will embrace true democratic progress, shout
“Shi!” (“Yes!”) to life and liberty and reject gay marriage in their country.